I wonder who Jonathan Noble is trying to save, F1, or his site...
http://www.autosport.com/news/report.php/id/114486
I am not expecting anyone to hang a poster of Toyota Prius in their bedroom because its fuel efficient and green eitherxpensive wrote:I think the problem is these small silent engines running economy races the public don't understand, when the general perception is that a racing car should be loud with big engines, consider what cars they are testing in "Top Gear" and you get the idea.
Who cares. Who cares? That's the question. Get a grip, don't be the kind who thinks too much and forget the most essential things, so that at the end of the day all you say is righteous non-sense.autogyro wrote:It is essential to understand that electric traction WILL replace internal combustion in the future.
Hybrid systems including F1 are simply stop gaps along the way.
All the teams and engineers understand this even Ferrari.
The only reason Ferrari is again bitching is because they are not winning nothing else.
A return to V10 or even V12 ordinary aspirated IC engines would be similar to a return to steam traction.
I agree, and I appreciate the style with a dash of humor. =D> Vince McMahon and Bernie Eccelstone; now there's a frightening tag team.GitanesBlondes wrote:Here's the problem.
When you had the cars generating sparks in the 1980s through the early 1990s, it was because of the ride height on whatever car being as low as they could get it without the floor resting completely on the ground. It's incredible how low the floor was to the ground back then, just mere millimeters away. But it boiled down to it being a byproduct of trying to push the car to the absolute limit in terms of setup. This is just artificial stupidity that has no point.
If they want a show, they should call WWE HQ in Stamford, CT and get Vincent Kennedy McMahon on the line.
If they want to be seen as a sporting endeavour, it's time to take the kiddie gloves off, and getting back to F1 cars being nothing more than overpowered go-karts.
The irony of this sparks test being done at Spielberg is that it was once home to a circuit that did not require anything but the track and powerful cars for the show. Now we have another Mickey-Mouse circuit that lost all of the appeal of the Osterreichring.
"At Zeltweg, down the long straight to the Bosch Kurve, the car was throwing out 1400 bhp and just kept on pushing – you felt like you were sitting on a rocket." -Gerhard Berger
That was the show back then, run 5 BAR of boost and hope your engine was designed well enough so the driver could put together one, maybe two laps together with a qualifying engine, and the Goodyear qualifiers on a track that would punish you if you got anything wrong, with speeds averaging 150+MPH. Now, it's a 9-turn snoozefest that holds none of the uniqueness of the old circuit, with guys conserving fuel and tires for most of the race with the pitwall monitoring every last move.
That's why I say F1 is an engineering exercise currently because it has nothing to even do with motor racing other than that it dresses up like it to get more money.
afaik there is no minium ride height rules, you can run as low as you like as long as you don't wear the bottom plankGitanesBlondes wrote:Speaking of more silliness that still doesn't address the engine problems, Ferrari and Mercedes will be conducting a "sparks" test this weekend.
Titanium skid blocks to try and generate the excitement of the old days. Still ignores that was due to the no minimum ride height rule which is what F1 needs to get rid of. It was a stupid knee-jerk rule.
http://www.racer.com/f1/item/104563-spa ... a-practice